It is told from the third person’s point of view. Here the narrator is the one describing the
events taking place in the excerpt. He
is the one who tells us what is happening to the characters in the story.
Answer:
If a poem has six feet, it has twelve syllables.
Explanation:
In poetry, we have different kinds of feet. Since your question does not mention any specific type, let's assume it refers to the most common one, the iambic foot. A iambic foot is constituted of an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one. If you have an iambic tetrameter (tetra means four), that means your have 4 feet, or four pairs of syllables. If it is an iambic pentameter, you will have 5 feet. According to your question, the poem has 6 feet. Therefore, it has 6 pairs of syllables or, in other words, twelve syllables. An example of a line with 6 feet would be (the stressed syllables are in bold):
The things / which I / have seen / I now / can see / no more. -- William Wordsworth
The water cycle or a diagram/ chart of the weather and climate patterns throughout the country and time.
How wind farms have become a great source of economic growth as well getting people different ranges of employment that they are insterested in
The answer is the speaker .
The speaker implies, the listener infers.